Math emerges as big hurdle for teenagers.doc
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1、Math Emerges as Big Hurdle for TeenagersH.S. Improvement Hinges On Critical SubjectBy Debra Viadero Researchers from the United Negro College Fund went to West Virginia last year and asked 62 high school dropouts in the federal Job Corps program a simple, open-ended question. “What was it about scho
2、ol,” they wanted to know, “that caused you to quit?” With surprising consistency, a majority of the participants, most of whom were African-American or Hispanic, gave the same answer: “Math.” Though the results are not scientific, they point to a challenge that confronts policymakers and educators a
3、s they campaign to make American high schools more academically rigorous. Experts agree that if the goal is for all students to graduate from high school ready for college or other postsecondary study, schools have their work cut out for them, at least in mathematics. The challenge may be particular
4、ly daunting, these experts add, when it comes to the kinds of students drawn to training programs like the Job Corpsstudents who are members of minority groups or those who fall at the lower end of the academic-achievement scale. Yet, they note, the emphasis at the federal level so far has primarily
5、 been on improving reading. “I think, fundamentally, were going to find math is more critical than we might have thought it was,” said M. Christopher Brown II, the director of social justice and professional development for the American Educational Research Association, based in Washington. Mr. Brow
6、n spearheaded the not-yet-published West Virginia study when he was the director of the United Negro College Funds Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute in Fairfax, Va. Architects of the push for transforming high schools dont disagree that the task they face is particularly great in math. But,
7、they add, its not a reason to hold back on efforts to ratchet up academic content in high school math classes. “The problem is this: We have lots of kids coming into high schools who are not yet ready to take rigorous math coursework,” said Michael Cohen, the president of the Washington-based nonpro
8、fit group Achieve. Along with President Bush and the nations governors, Achieve is calling for improving high schools. “At the same time,” Mr. Cohen added, “we have to give the kids who are still in high school better than they have now. We just cant afford to wait until better-prepared students com
9、e through the pipeline.” In the study conducted by the United Negro College Fund, dropouts in the Job Corps who ranged in age from 16 to their mid-20s cited a variety of reasons for their lack of success with high school math. They talked about getting “pushed along” in school despite not having mas
10、tered the subject, having poor-quality textbooks, feeling bored, and being taught math by athletic coaches or by teachers whom they considered not “smart.” Passing Along “They basically pass students along,” agreed Crystal Collett, 18, a student at Kansas City Community College in Kansas City, Kan.
11、Although she was not part of the West Virginia study, she found herself taking remedial math upon entering community college. “In high school, my algebra teacher would give us an assignment and tell us to do the homework,” Ms. Collett recalled in a telephone interview. “The next day, she would give
12、answers on the overhead. I never understood how she did it, and she didnt show us.” National statistics bear out observations that high school math is a struggle for many studentsnot just those who are low-achieving or disadvantaged in some way. On the 2000 National Assessment of Educational Progres
13、s test in math, 17 percent of high school seniors scored at the “proficient” leveljust under half the percentage scoring at that level on the NAEP reading test. Twenty-two percent of college freshmen, like Ms. Collett, are identified as needing remedial math, according to the National Center for Edu
14、cation Statistics. But the climb to college-level math could be hardest on minority students, many of whom attend schools with fewer resources, less experienced teachers, and more teachers teaching subjects for which they were not trained. Many African-American students are disproportionately assign
15、ed to lower-level math classes in high school, sometimes even when they have the grades to do better. On 12th grade NAEP math tests given in 2000, black and white students were separated by a gap of 34 scale-score pointsabout the same as in 1990. (Among younger students, mathematics differences on N
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